When choosing an oven: Do not look at average consumption, but at the time of day when you are most pressured (peak load).
5 x GN: For small to medium-sized kitchens with low volume (25 to 75 covers)
- Fast heating
- Flexibility
- Minimal heat loss
"The oven is a supplement, but not the primary production unit"
7 x GN (Bestseller): For busy kitchens/smaller hotels (35 to 100 covers)
- Can handle peak loads, but still offers flexibility for à la carte
- Good for preparing multiple dishes simultaneously (parallel production)
- Mixed production throughout the day
- Preparation and service in the same oven
"The oven is important, but you still have other production units"
10 x GN: For canteens/hotels/production facilities/institutions with high volume (50 to 150 covers)
- Suitable for heavy production all day
- Regenerates in 12 min. (Reheating chilled products)
"The oven is the primary production unit".
20 x GN with trolley: Large canteen/central kitchen/catering (100 to 300 covers)
- Mass production instead of flexibility
- Reduces manual handling
- Regenerates in 12 min. (reheating chilled food)
- High efficiency per hour is crucial
Two ovens side-by-side or stacked:
- You work with different cooking types simultaneously
- Downtime is critical (always a backup oven)
- You want to separate (prep and service or meat vs. vegetables)
Stack if floor space is limited. Otherwise, a side-by-side setup is always preferable.
In short:
- 5 x GN: space constraints / low volume
- 7 x GN: flexible operation / medium volume
- 10 x GN: professional standard / high operation
- 20 x GN: industrial production / maximum volume
See all models here.